Common was born Lonnie Rashid Lynn, Jr. in Chicago on March 13, 1972 to Lonnie, Sr. a former pro basketball player, and Dr. Mahila Ann Hines, an educator. He started rapping while still in high school, forming a trio called C.D.R. which opened for acts like N.W.A. and Big Daddy Kane. He adopted the alias Common Sense by 1992 which is when he released his first CD, entitled โ€œCan I Borrow a Dollar?โ€ He shortened his name to just Common after a lawsuit by a band claiming to have the exclusive trademark for โ€œCommon Sense.โ€

In 2002, he made his screen debut in Brown Sugar, and a year later he won his first Grammy for โ€œLove of My Life,โ€ a duet he did with Erykah Badu for the same film. Since then, heโ€™s made 7 more CDs, and appeared in such films as Smokinโ€™ Aces, Dave Chappelleโ€™s Block Party, American Gangster, Wanted, Street Kings and Date Night. Here, he talks about his new movie, Just Wright, a romantic comedy directed by Sanaa Hamri where he stars opposite Queen Latifah. 
 
Common: Hey, peace Kam, how are you?

Kam Williams: All is well, thanks. I donโ€™t know whether you remember but the last time we spoke I told you my son was taking saxophone lessons with your saxophonist, Justin Robinson.

C: Definitely, man. I hope heโ€™s doing well.

KW: Heโ€™s doing fine, thanks. How does it feel to be playing your first lead role as Scott McKnight in Just Wright?

C: It feels wonderful! This is something I dreamt of and prayed for. Itโ€™s a blessing to get this opportunity to play a leading man. I feel like itโ€™s the beginning of a new stage of my career as an actor.

KW: And how was it being directed by Sanaa Hamri and acting opposite Queen Latifah, Paula Patton, Phylicia Rashad and Pam Grier?

C: It was cool! These are beautiful, beautiful women. And it was great having Sanaa at the helm, because she brought a fresh perspective to the project in terms of her vision that made it easy for women to relate to it, given how my character was portrayed as sensitive and a good person. But, by the same token, she was also wise enough to balance that with his chi energy as an NBA player to attract a male audience as well. 

KW: When is your new CD, โ€œThe Believerโ€ being released?

C: The new studio album is coming out in the Fall, but I have a Greatest Hits album coming out May 25th.

KW: Larry Greenberg says, he would love to hear a musical collaboration by you and Queen Latifah. He wants to know whether thereโ€™s any chance of that happening.

C: We already hooked up on a collaboration on that Greatest Hits album, itโ€™s a new song featuring Queen Latifah called โ€œThe Next Time.โ€ I think itโ€™s the first of many duets weโ€™ll be doing. The song is soulful and makes you feel good. So, Iโ€™m looking forward to doing more music with her, as well as more movies.

KW: Larry says, โ€œYou seem to be involved in so many good causes from HIV/AIDS awareness to PETA. Is there any particular cause you want people to get involved in today?โ€

?C: Yeah, my Common Ground Foundation [http://www.commongroundfoundation.org/], because itโ€™s about empowering youth in a holistic way, and about helping to shape our leaders of tomorrow.

KW: Erik Daniels says, โ€œI’m a big fan of Common and one of his songs that I like is Orange Pineapple Juice.โ€ He wants to know, when was the last time you had some?

C: Oh, I had some just the other day, mixed with Ciroc coconut, and it was great!.

KW: Childrenโ€™s book author Irene Smalls asks, what is the hardest thing you have had to do in your career thus far?

C: I think the hardest thing Iโ€™ve had to do was to change my name from Common Sense to Common, not only because I was attached to it since it meant something to me, but because I was just beginning to build some name recognition when I had to deal with a lawsuit over it. That was one of the more traumatizing things Iโ€™ve experienced career-wise. It was like, โ€œMan! How can somebody just take my name?โ€ Still, everything ultimately came together in divine time, and the name Common is very appropriate because my music represents everyday people. Common is right.

KW: โ€œRealtor to the Starsโ€ Jimmy Bayan says he saw you shooting hoops in Roxbury Park in L.A. about a year ago. He wants to know if that was in preparation for this role?

C: Yes, I was. But it was so much fun preparing for the role that it wasnโ€™t really work. I was just going out there to get my hoop game back up. Ask Jimmy this question back, โ€œHow was my game at that point?โ€

KW: Will do. Jimmy also wants to know, if you weren’t acting or doing music, what would you have become?

C: I believe a teacher. I always feel that I have something to say that will hopefully inspire.

KW: Amina Ross from Brooklyn says sheโ€™s your biggest fan. She wants to know, what are your religious beliefs? If I remember correctly, youโ€™re a member of Reverend Wrightโ€™s church in Chicago.    

C: Iโ€™m a Christian. I believe in God, and Iโ€™ve been a member of that church, Trinity United Church of Christ since I was 8. I donโ€™t live in Chicago anymore, so I donโ€™t get there regularly. But I believe God exists in us all, so I donโ€™t knock any other religions. I respect anyone with spiritual beliefs in a higher being.

KW: Amina Ross has a follow-up. Did you have to compromise you music to make it?

C: No, never. Iโ€™ve stayed true to who I was, as much as I could. There was one moment when a record label tried to get me to make some songs that sounded like Biggie and Nas, who were the hottest guys on the radio at the time, but I knew it would have to come from my soul to be a hit. One of my biggest songs, โ€œThe Light,โ€ was just something I wrote because that was they way I really felt about somebody. So, I donโ€™t think Iโ€™ve ever compromised myself.  

KW: Maceo Torres-Trujillo asks whether your song โ€œI Used to Love H.E.R.โ€ caused a rift between the East Coast and West Coast rap artists?

C: No, but it caused a situation between myself and Ice Cube and the Westside Connection. It started a little beef, but it ended up being resolved, and out of it we both came up with some good raps. They really felt that I was dissing the West Coast, but I love the West Coast. I grew up listening to both East Coast and West Coast.

KW: Professor Mia Mask asks, growing up, who were your role models?

C: Iโ€™d say my mother, my Math teacher Mr. Brown, and Muhammad Ali.

KW: Professor Mask also asks, do you think black musical artists are misrepresented in the mainstream media?

C: Yeah, absolutely. Rap artists tend to be stereotyped in one way, as if they all wear chains, curse, flash money and abuse women. Itโ€™s unfair not to look at them as individuals with different personalities. That